*enjoys reading Claudia's comment*
Okay. As promised, here is the next chapter.
Chapter Three
In the midst of Downtown Manhattan stood an abandoned brick, four-story fire station built by the city around the turn of the twentieth century. It bore a coat of faded red paint and legend above the garage door in chipped gilt letters that read, “Engine Company #93.” Jessica stood in the white-tiled garage bay with a middle-aged real estate woman wearing a blazer.
“Besides this, you’ve got another substantial work area on the ground floor, office space, sleeping quarters and showers on the next floor, and you have a full kitchen on the top level.” The real estate woman explained. “It’s ten thousand square feet total.”
“It’s nine thousand six hundred and forty-two point fifty-five square feet, ma’am.” Christina corrected, coming out of the office area with a pocket calculator.
Frowning at Christina, the realtor remarked, “Who’s she? Your accountant?”
“Close. She’s one of my partners.” Jessica said with a grin. “What do you think, Christy?”
“This building makes the Happiness Hotel look like Cinderella’s Castle in Disney World.” Christina replied. “I think it should be condemned. There’s serious metal fatigue in all the load-bearing members, the wiring is substandard, it’s completely inadequate for our power needs, and the neighborhood is like a demilitarized zone.”
Jessica and the realtor stood perplexed by Christina’s words, which they only could’ve accepted as harsh beyond capacity. “Okay,” Jessica uttered, “So I take it that the bathrooms here could use a woman’s touch?”
Before Christina could even answer, a voice spoke up from above them. “Hey!” They all looked up past a shiny brass fire pole and through a large, well-crafted, circular hole to see Stephanie standing right beside it. “Does this pole still work?” Before she could give anyone the chance to clarify whether if it had or not, she slid down it with great ease and ended up right in the garage with Jessica, Christina, and the realtor.
“I take it that it does work.” Jessica said with sarcasm.
“This place is really great!” Stephanie exclaimed. “When do we move in? Ya’ll have got to try this freakin’ pole! I’m gonna get my stuff!” She dashed away from the group and up the stairs, only to stop briefly and look right back at them. “We should stay here! Tonight! Sleep here! Ya know? Try it out?”
“I don’t know…it just seems kinda ‘pricey’ for a fixer-upper, don’t ya think?” Jessica said. “We’re just tryin’ to keep our costs down. You know how it is when you’re starting a new company.”
“What are you calling your business?” The realtor inquired.
“Ghostbusters.” Stephanie remarked.
“Oh, well, this place is perfect for it.”
Jessica gazed at the realtor for a moment and then towards Stephanie, who was excitedly nodding her head for her to say “Yes” to the idea. She then looked towards Christina, who was slowly shaking her head for her to say “No” to it. Feeling as if she was at a crossroads, Jessica calmly turned to the realtor and said, “I think we’ll take it.”
~~~~~~~~~~~~
Not a single soul in the Foster’s mansion dared go near the room of Frankie Foster, as the fourth week of her quarantine approached. Several of the friends living there passed by the closed doorway with great concern, fearing that their resident housekeeper had finally hit rock bottom. Out of everyone in the house, the only one who had not taken Frankie’s sanity into consideration was Bloo, who was knocking hard on Frankie’s door, every time he needed something taking care of.
“Frankie! I know you’re in there, woman!” Bloo shouted. “C’mon! I need some lunch! I’m huuuuungry!”
As Bloo kept knocking and shouting every second, the most particular friends of the house (Wilt, Coco, and Eduardo) noticed him bothering the emotionally troubled Frankie, which they knew immediately was a horrible idea. “No, Bloo! That is not okay!” Wilt exclaimed. “Don’t bother Frankie right now. She’s been going through quite a bit lately.”
“She’s been goin’ through quite a bit everyday!” Bloo contradicted. “What makes today or the days of the past hundred weeks so different?”
“Because Senorita Frankie es going through a muy terrible breakdown.” Eduardo stated.
“Coco, coco, coco, co!” Coco added.
“Right.” Wilt said. “So just try not to bother her for the next week or so.”
“The next week or so?” Bloo remarked with shock. “Well, who the heck knows how long that would be?”
Wilt shook his head negatively. “It’s just not safe right now, Bloo. We have to be careful. We’re not sure what’s wrong with Frankie right now.”
“Well, I’m intending on finding out, one way or the other!” Bloo declared, before reaching up at the doorknob and opening the door to Frankie’s room. Wilt, Eduardo, and Coco reacted with fear, as they watched him open it, screaming “No!” as the door swung open and let out an intense beam of white and red light that basked Bloo completely in it.
Bloo looked past the red/white hue that had shined all around him, squinting his eyes to see whatever it was that had been shooting out the beam of light. He was shocked to have seen what had appeared to be a gateway to another realm, a fiery path leading to a temple door. On each side of the door was a strange, snarling creature that could be best described as a “Terror Dog.” Their front claws were raised toward each other in a symbolic pose. The incredible vision was accompanied by the unearthly chanting.
Bloo stood where he was, transfixed by horror, the flames reflecting in his eyes. “Fr…Fr…Fr…Fr…Frank…Frankie?”
The chanting got more frenetic and ominous, as the temple doors slowly began to open. One of the Terror Dogs suddenly spoke, whispering loudly and hoarsely, “ZUUUUUUUUUUULLLLLLLLLL!”
It never even occurred to Bloo that he was screaming, as he had slammed the door to Frankie’s room and ran towards Wilt, Eduardo, and Coco. “Bloo, what’s wrong?” Wilt asked him. “What did you see? Is Frankie alright?”
Bloo never answered. He was so shaken by the vision that he continued screaming in horror, even as he rushed back into the room that he shared with his three friends, closing the door behind him and jumping into the bed. He draped the bed sheets over his small, frail body and trembled under them, his screams now muffled to anyone within or outside the room.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The garage bay doors to the firehouse were opened, as two painters on scaffolding were making the finishing touches on the front of the structure in flat black paint. Jessica stood by and watched a carpenter hang a temporary sign over the door that read, “Ghostbusters.” She barely even noticed Scooter approaching her as she gazed upon it.
“You don’t think it’s too subtle, do ya?” She asked the carpenter. “You don’t think people are going to drive down and not see it, thinkin’ we’re a new Starbucks or somethin’, right?”
Scooter looked up at the sign and smiled with interest. “I think it looks great, Dr. Lauren. Not all business start off with something grand. I remember the time we first opened the Muppet Theatre with half of the seats ripped up with springs coming out of them.”
“Why, thank you. That’s very sweet of you to say.” Jessica remarked. “Who the h*ll are you again?”
“Oh, I’m Scooter. Remember? We met the other week at the theatre, when we ran into our ghost problem?”
It took Jessica a short while to remember the incident, and when she finally had, a smile crept across her face. “Oh, yeah. The little gofer dude. What up with ya?”
“Well, I came to see if Dr. Zimmermann was around.” Scooter replied. “My uncle had no choice but to close down the Theatre on account of all of the ghosts and goblins coming in there, haunting up the place. We’ve all been looking up job applications at the Hotel to find temporary replacements for the jobs we had before. And…”
“And you just happened to have seen our new commercial on television and want to sign up for a job here?” Jessica interjected. “Aww! Ain’t that sweet?”
“Uh…well, actually I just figured I could get a job at the University and checked with Dr. Zimmermann to see what they had.” Scooter said, and the smile on Jessica’s face quickly faded. “But you’re starting your own business here? That’s great! I could really use a job. That is, if you’re offering one.”
“Well, of course we are.” Jessica said, her smile returning as quickly as it had disappeared. “We could use all the help we can get in a business like this one.”
The loud blaring of a siren and the bright flash of emergency lights that shined in the corner of their eyes suddenly interrupted the conversation between the two. At first they thought an ambulance or fire truck was passing by. But once they turned their heads in the direction it was all coming from, they spotted a very long, old and gray 1959 Cadillac ambulance, being driven by Stephanie Zimmermann. The car had a battered look to it and rumbled noisily due to a broken muffler.
“Please tell me she got this piece of crap as a rental.” Jessica murmured.
Stephanie jumped out from the driver’s side of the vehicle with great enthusiasm and said, “Everybody can relax. I found the car. How do you like it?”
“If this is a car, then Fozzie’s Studebaker must be a spaceship.” Scooter commented.
“Well, I admit that it’s got some issues here and there.” Stephanie stated. “It might need some suspension work and shocks. Brakes, brake pads, lining, steering box, transmission, rear-end…”
“How much?” Jessica interrupted, the thought of the amount used to purchase such a wreck of a vehicle haunting her mind.
Stephanie’s voice shook a little as she cleared her throat and uttered the amount, “Uh…only four thousand eight hundred dollars.” And Jessica nearly collapsed to the ground. The only thing keeping her up other than gravity was the urge to wring Stephanie’s neck. But the shock of hearing the amount had paralyzed her body. “It, uh, might also need new rings, mufflers, and a little wiring.”
Scooter stepped on the front bumper and rocked it, causing it to wallow badly. “I think working with you all might not be so different than working with the Muppets.”
~~~~~~~~~~~~
“Are you certain she said ‘Zuul’, Bloo?” Wilt asked. “She might’ve been saying ‘Zulu’.”
“Sí,” Eduardo agreed. “Or it might’ve been Spanish. Ya know? Like how I’m always calling you ‘Azul’.”
“Coco.” Coco added.
“NO!” Bloo screamed in a mixture of frustration and fear. “It was Zuul!
ZUUL! Not ‘Zulu’ or ‘Azul’ or ‘Coco’! Zuul!”
Wilt raised his hands up in protest. “Okay. Okay. Calm down, Bloo. We believe what you heard. But what you saw is a completely different story.”
“No, no! We’re in the
same story here! Try to keep up, Wilt! It’s Chapter Three, not Chapter Fourteen!” Bloo exclaimed. “I saw what I saw! No joke, no prank, no kiddin’! I saw flames, a temple of doom, and two demon-lookin’ dogs! Who could make up weird stuff like that?”
“You!” A voice spoke from near the group, and they looked towards the doorway of the bedroom to see Mac standing there, with a sarcastic expression on his face. “You make up all sorts of silly stuff, Bloo…
all the time. How’s this any different from all the other pranks you’d pulled in the past?”
“Because it’s for real, I tell ya!” Bloo shouted, jumping off the bed and walking towards Mac. But instead of walking up to him, he walked past him and out the door, heading down the hallway. “And I am going to
prove it!”
Mac followed Bloo out of the room along with Wilt, Coco, and Eduardo, moving with him down the hallway and into the Arcade Room, where other friends were watching episodes of
The Muppet Show on television. “Bloo, how are you going to prove what you saw? Every time you come up with proof of something, it turns out to be just as outlandish as what you’re proving it for.”
“Nuh-uh!” Bloo contradicted. “Remember Uncle Pockets? I proved that he was hiding something all along!”
“But, Bloo, you tried to prove that he was an evil imaginary friend bent on taking over the house.” Wilt stated.
“And your point?” Bloo remarked.
Mac just shook his head negatively as he said, “Listen, Bloo…I’m saying this not as your creator or your friend, but as your conscience. Please stop this before…”
“THERE!” Bloo yelled, nearly scaring the life out of Mac and everyone else in the room, as he pointed towards the television set, which had a strange image on the screen that soon caught everyone’s attention.
On the television screen, two Muppet whatnot children (a boy and a girl) were asleep in their bedroom when suddenly supernatural moaning and groaning awakened them. They screamed and jumped out bed, while their Muppet whatnot mother and Muppet whatnot father rushed in to find the children cowering against the wall.
“What is it? What’s wrong?” The Father asked.
“Look!” The kids screamed, pointing to the closet, just as a Muppet ghost (another whatnot wearing a white sheet over his body) popped out from it, nearly tripping over himself in the process, and let out a ghostly howl.
The whatnot mother turned to the whatnot father and said, “Oh, dear. It’s that darn ghost again. Can’t you do something about it?”
“I’ve tried everything, honey!” The father helplessly said. “I guess we’ll just have to move.”
The mother and the kids looked at him with disappointment. “Gee, there must be another way.”
At this point in the commercial, Stephanie Zimmermann stepped in the foreground, her head nearly cut out of the frame due to the size difference between her and the Muppet actors. “Are you troubled by strange noises in the night? Do you experience feelings of dread in your basement or attic? Have you or your family actually seen a spook, specter, or ghost? If the answer is yes, then don’t wait another minute. Just pick up the phone and call the professionals: Ghostbusters!”
The scene abruptly switched from the bedroom to the interior of the firehouse in a second. Jessica, Stephanie, and Christina were standing in front of the Ghostbusters’ sign. Christina stepped forward and said, “Our courteous and efficient staff is on call twenty-four hours a day to serve all your supernatural elimination needs.”
In the reception area, Miss Piggy (not playing a secretary, but
the actual secretary for the Ghostbusters) was seen answering the telephone with a big fake smile on her face. “Ghostbusters. We’ll be right there. Kissy, kissy!” she said in a cheery tone.
Back in the children’s bedroom, Christina was taking P.K.E. readings along the baseboards, while Stephanie popped up from under the bed and smiled proudly. “Got him! I don’t think ya’ll have any more trouble with that ghost!” she exclaimed.
They all looked pleased as punch as Jessica handed the father a bill. The whatnot father looked at the total and said, “And it’s economical, too!”
“How can we ever thank you nice, young people?” The mother asked.
“All in a day’s work, ma’am.” Jessica said with a big, cheesy smile. “After all…we’re Ghostbusters.” On her last few lines, she turned to the camera and winked.
The scene switched to the “front door” of the family’s “house,” as the family waved goodbye to the Ghostbusters and sang in a tune that was straight out of the 50s: “
If you have ghost, but you don’t want to play host. You can’t sleep at all, so who do you call…Ghostbusters! Ghostbusters!”
Jessica, Stephanie, and Christina smiled at the camera as a phone number was displayed across the bottom of the screen. The three women then said in unison, “We’re ready to believe you!”
It was silent for quite a while inside the Arcade Room, in the aftermath of all the imaginary friends watching the bizarre commercial. But soon the room suddenly filled with uncontrollable laughter, as all of the friends were either on their backs, sitting up and slapping their knees, or standing and holding their guts.
“Oh, man! I’m sorry, but that’s the funniest thing since Mr. Herriman’s ‘Funny Bunny’ dance!” Wilt commented.
“Sí, that was muy estúpido!” Eduardo exclaimed.
“Coco! Coco!” Coco uttered between chuckles.
“Yeah, Bloo,” Mac said while trying to compose himself, “Those people are even crazier than you.” After Mac was able to stop laughing long enough to address Bloo, he realized that his imaginary friend was gone from the room, undoubtedly heading to the Ghostbusters’ firehouse and going to them on his little “problem.” “Oh, no!”
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Moments later, Bloo was sitting inside that particular firehouse, hooked up to a lie detector. Christina was monitoring the readout and videotaping the interview. Jessica, Stephanie, and Scooter were listening intently, waiting for Bloo’s assessment of his experience.
“I think something in Frankie’s room got her and is trying to get the rest of us.” Bloo stated.
Jessica stared at him, trying to make sense of his last statement. “What do you think, Christina?”
“He’s telling the truth.” Christina replied, while checking the polygraph. “Or at least he thinks he is.”
“Well, of course I’m tellin’ the truth, lady!” Bloo defensively shouted. “Why would anyone make up a thing like that?” After asking that question, Bloo looked around sheepishly, hoping neither of the people in that room would suspect anything just by looking at him.
“Hey, hey, relax, little fella.” Stephanie told him. “We’re not judgin’ ya. We’re just being a little careful, ya know?”
“Yeah, some people like the attention.” Jessica said. “Some people are just nutballs who think they’re smart or somethin’. And I personally just cannot stand people like that!”
Bloo chuckled nervously at the tension in Jessica’s voice as she made that last remark. “Y-Yeah…annoys the heck outta ya, doesn’t it?”
“You know, this could be a past life experience, intruding the present.” Scooter assessed.
“Or even a race memory, stored in the collective unconscious.” Christina assumed. “And I wouldn’t rule out clairvoyance or telepathic contact either.”
“Why don’t we check out the building?” Stephanie suggested. “It may have a history of psychic disturbance.”
“Good idea, Steph.” Jessica commented, before turning back to Bloo. “Were any other words spoken that you remember?”
“No,” Bloo uttered. “Just that one word: ‘Zuul’. But I have no idea what it means.”
“I can see if I can find the word ‘Zuul’ in
Tobin’s Spirit Guide.” Scooter offered. “I’m certain they have plenty of information about it in there.”
Listening to Scooter, Jessica and Stephanie looked to each other and smiled, both having the same perfect idea. “Scoot, why don’t you go with Bloo to the mansion and check it out?” Stephanie suggested.
Scooter couldn’t help but to feel a little excited. “Really? Y-You want
me to go on an
actual investigation?”
“Yeah, why not?” Jessica said. “I’ll even come with ya and monitor your progress. That way I can let the girls know how well you’re doin’ on your first day.”
“That’ll be marvelous, Dr. Lauren!” Scooter gleefully remarked.
“Please, call me Jess…no wait…keep callin’ me Dr. Lauren. I just like the sound of that.”
END OF CHAPTER THREE